Responsive Adsense

Thank you for visiting. In honour of the 5th anniversary of Uwakwe Reflections, we have relocated to a bigger platform at www.uwakwereflections.org. Do meet us there.

Monday, 18 March 2013

Reflection/Homily: Fifth (5th) Sunday of Lent Year C

Reflection/Homily: Fifth (5th) Sunday of Lent Year C
Homily: The Power of Divine Friendship

The history of the Israelites was punctuated with several ups and downs. After the Babylonian exile, they had to begin life afresh with little or no hope. It was difficult for them to hope for a brighter future because they had lost their friendship with God. God restored this friendship by promising them restoration and hope. That is why in the first reading (Is. 43:16-21) we see God’s promise of restoration and hope. He urged the Israelites to forget the past because He was doing a new thing in their lives.

In the gospel reading (Jn. 8:1-11), we see a practical example of God’s promise of hope and restoration in the life of the adulterous woman. After being caught in adultery and seeing the people’s readiness to stone her to death, she lost every hope of survival until Jesus intervened. By that sinful act, she lost her friendship with her family, with the society and with God but Jesus’ promise was to do a new thing in her life – to restore this lost friendship.

Today, God also addresses this message to us in a special way. Through the first reading, He reminds us of the wonders He had done in the history of man and invites us to trust Him based on these testimonies. This invitation is a call to repentance, to abandon and forget our old and evil way of life and embrace a new and better way of life. 


As we approach the Holy Week, this divine invitation becomes stronger than ever. Perhaps, we may have fallen into one mortal sin or the other during this Lenten season and we think all hope is gone. Perhaps, we may have been unfaithful to our Lenten observance all this while and we feel it is too late trying to do something positive now. Jesus is offering us a new and unique opportunity just as he offered the adulterous woman. We have to make a new resolution as he is doing something new in our lives.

This period is a special moment of grace, a moment of restoration of divine friendship and a moment of hope. It is also a moment of preparation for that great event that reconciled the friendship between God and man. This is a moment God is exposing the unlimitedness of His love, the magnanimity of His grace and the inexhaustibility of His gifts. Like St. Paul would say, “Now is the favourable time of salvation” (cf. 2 Cor. 6:2) because at this moment, the mercy of God is at its peak, the theology of reconciliation is being proclaimed and the power of divine friendship is made manifest in man.

At this favourable time of salvation, the Church invites us to make good use of the available opportunities and graces God is offering us to get reconciled to him. At the peak of God’s mercy, the Church reminds us of the availability of God’s forgiveness and mercy even when we are obviously guilty. Through the theology of reconciliation, the Church offers us the message of reconciliation with God. All these are made possible through the friendship God is offering us in Jesus Christ.

Beloved friends, like the adulterous woman, we have been unfaithful in several ways. Some of us have been unfaithful to our marital vows, the promises we made at ordination/profession and the moral obligations binding us. The greatest danger of infidelity is its ability to destroy relationships and friendships. Thus, our infidelity has frustrated our relationship and friendship with our spouses, friends, relations, the Church and God. Like the adulterous woman too, we have a lot of persons and things accusing us to make sure we are severely punished. From all these, Jesus promises to deliver us. This deliverance is a part of the new thing God is doing for us.

Therefore, as we approach the Holy Week, let us use this opportunity to renew our friendship with Jesus who came to die that we might be saved. Let us be conscious of Christ’s injunction “go and sin no more.” As a final word, let us not forget to follow the examples of St. Paul in the second reading (Phil. 3:8-14). He regarded everything as lost compared to friendship with God. Like him, let us then forget the past and run towards the goal God has called us from above in Christ Jesus.  God loves you.

No comments:

Post a Comment

DISCLAIMER: Comments, remarks and observations are allowed to enable my readers freely express their opinions concerning issues raised in this post. However, while I recommend the observance of the rule of courtesy for every comment, comments on this post do not in any way express my personal opinion. They are strictly the opinions of those who made the comments.

Print Friendly